No, departure is when you leave. It is an antonym of arrival.
departure
Exodus
Deviation means changes from what has been presumed as usual or normal.
Yes, "departure" is a noun. It refers to the act of leaving or the state of being away from a place.
"Shuppatsu" is a Japanese word and in English it means "Departure"
No, the word 'depart' is a verb (depart, departs, departing, departed), to go away; to leave; to diverge; to pass away. The noun forms for the verb to depart are departure and the gerund, departing.
The word "departure" has three syllables.
No, the sentence is totally incorrect. The word "repetition" means things done over and over, and has nothing to do with trains leaving. The word "departure" is the one that means "leaving." I think you meant to say "Upon it's departure, the train will head in a westerly direction," which is a fancy way of saying "When it leaves, the train will travel west."
The word "afraid" slant rhymes with the word "away" but means scared.
gift means to give away.
Well, someone who knew that depart means "to leave" would have a good idea what the word departure means, but even if the person didn't know what depart meant, the person might be able to deconstruct the word's meaning from the word part, meaning "separate, disparate, apart, diverse."